UPDATE 3-WeWork preps for IPO with growing revenues and widening losses. WeWork owner The We Company on Wednesday
published detailed financial statements for the first time,
showing it lost more than $900 million in the first half of 2019
while revenue doubled, as it steps up preparations for an
initial public offering next month. >>

UPDATE 4-WeWork to test IPO investor appetite with widening losses. WeWork owner The We Company published
detailed financial statements for the first time on Wednesday,
revealing breakneck revenue growth and soaring losses, as it
prepares for an initial public offering as early as next month. >>

UPDATE 5-WeWork to test IPO investor appetite with widening losses. WeWork owner The We Company published
detailed financial statements for the first time on Wednesday,
revealing breakneck revenue growth and soaring losses, as it
prepares for an initial public offering as early as next month. >>

We Work doubles revenue, but operating loss as well. The shares workspace company, which recently changed its name to The We Company, has filed an IPO prospectus. >>

WeWork doesn't have a single woman director, according to IPO filing. WeWork's parent known formally as the We Company is going public with an all-male board of directors. >>

WeWork IPO filing leaves questions unanswered. CNBC's Deirdre Bosa examines WeWork corporate structure and more as the company files for its IPO. >>

WeWork IPO Shows It’s the Most Magical Unicorn. Everything about the company is over-the-top: its growth, losses, potential conflicts of interest and financial gymnastics. >>

WeWork offers a romantic vision in its IPO filing — alongside staggering losses. WeWork uses aspirational language to brand its business of providing flexible office leases, a strategy that has lured billions in funding. >>

WeWork preps for IPO with growing revenues and widening losses. WeWork owner The We Company on Wednesday published detailed financial statements for the first time, showing it lost more than $900 million in the first half of 2019 while revenue doubled, as it steps up preparations for an initial public offering next month. >>

WeWork reveals loss, revenue growth as it prepares IPO. The office space-sharing company, which recently renamed itself The We Co., said in a regulatory filing Wednesday that it now has 527,000 memberships across 29 countries. That's nearly double the 268,000 members it had in the prior-year period. >>

WeWork Stands Before Us in All Its Naked Glory. The company’s IPO prospectus is an exercise in ducking reality. What happens to $47 billion of lease obligations if there’s a recession? >>

WeWork to test IPO investor appetite with widening losses. WeWork owner The We Company published detailed financial statements for the first time on Wednesday, revealing breakneck revenue growth and soaring losses, as it prepares for an initial public offering as early as next month. >>